Bulgaria, by Frank Fox 
 
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Title: Bulgaria 
Author: Frank Fox 
Illustrator: Jan V. Mrkvitchka Noel Pocock 
Release Date: August 6, 2007 [EBook #22257] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 
BULGARIA *** 
 
Produced by Bruce Albrecht, Jacqueline Jeremy and the Online 
Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net 
 
BULGARIA
Uniform with this Volume 
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY ENGLAND FRANCE ITALY 
SWITZERLAND 
A. AND C. BLACK, LTD., 4 SOHO SQUARE, LONDON, W. 
 
[Illustration: A YOUNG SHÔP MAN OF THE DISTRICT OF SOFIA 
Frontispiece] 
 
BULGARIA 
BY 
FRANK FOX AUTHOR OF "ENGLAND," "ITALY," AND 
"SWITZERLAND" 
WITH 32 FULL-PAGE ILLUSTRATIONS IN COLOUR 
LONDON A. AND C. BLACK, LIMITED 1915 
 
CONTENTS 
CHAPTER I 
Page 
BY WAY OF INTRODUCTION 1 
CHAPTER II 
BULGARIA AND THE DEATH OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE 15 
CHAPTER III
THE SCRAP-HEAP OF RACES 36 
CHAPTER IV 
BULGARIA--A POWER AND A TURKISH PROVINCE 52 
CHAPTER V 
THE LIBERATION OF BULGARIA 65 
CHAPTER VI 
THE WAR OF 1912-1913 77 
CHAPTER VII 
A WAR CORRESPONDENT'S TRIALS IN BULGARIA 99 
CHAPTER VIII 
INCIDENTS OF BULGARIAN CHARACTER 120 
CHAPTER IX 
THE TRAGEDY OF 1914 134 
CHAPTER X 
SOME FACTS FOR THE TOURIST AND THE ECONOMIST 150 
CHAPTER XI 
HOW BULGARIA IS GOVERNED 167 
CHAPTER XII 
THE FUTURE OF BULGARIA 174
CHAPTER XIII 
THE RESPONSIBILITY OF EUROPE 187 
INDEX 207 
 
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 
By JAN V. MRKVITCHKA and NOEL POCOCK* 
1. A Young Shôp Man of the District of Sofia Frontispiece 
FACING PAGE 
2. A Contented Turk 8 
3. A Peasant at Work--District of Tsaribrod 17 
4. Women of Pordim, in the Plevna District 19 
5. In the Harvest Fields near Sofia 22 
6. A Shôp Woman of the District of Sofia 24 
7. A Woman of Thrace, of the Shôp Tribe, and of Macedonia 33 
8. *Sistov, on the Danube 40 
9. Ancient Costume of Balkan Peasant Women near Gabrovo 49 
10. A Wedding in the Rhodopes 56 
11. *Roustchouk, on the Danube 65 
12. "Mystery"--a Study in the Roustchouk District 67 
13. A Blind Beggar Woman 70
14. A Young Married Shôp Woman 72 
15. *A Bulgarian Market Town 75 
16. Blessing the Lamb on St. George's Day 78 
17. *The Cathedral, Sofia 81 
18. *An Adrianople Street 88 
19. *The Shipka Pass 97 
20. A Young Widow at her Husband's Grave 104 
21. Gipsies 113 
22. A Peasant of the Tsaribrod District 120 
23. The Ratchenitza, the National Dance of Bulgaria 129 
24. A Bagpiper 136 
25. A Young Girl of Irn 145 
26. Guarding the Flocks and Herds 152 
27. An Old Street in Philippopolis 161 
28. A Grave Question 168 
29. A Young Man of the Choumla District 177 
30. *A Bulgarian Farm 184 
31. A Young Woman of the Roustchouk District 193 
32. At the Well 200 
Sketch Map at end of Volume.
BULGARIA 
CHAPTER I 
BY WAY OF INTRODUCTION 
Instructed in the autumn of 1912 to join the Bulgarian army, then 
mobilising for war against Turkey, as war correspondent for the 
London Morning Post, I made my preparations with the thought 
uppermost that I was going to a cut-throat country where massacre was 
the national sport and human life was regarded with no sentimental 
degree of respect. The Bulgarians, a generation ago, had been paraded 
before the eyes of the British people by the fiery eloquence of Mr. 
Gladstone as a deeply suffering people, wretched victims of Turkish 
atrocities. After the wide sympathy that followed his Bulgarian 
Atrocities campaign there came a strong reaction. It was maintained 
that the Bulgarians were by no means the blameless victims of the 
Turks; and could themselves initiate massacres as well as suffer from 
them. Some even charged that there was a good deal of party spirit to 
account for the heat of Mr. Gladstone's championship. I think that the 
average British opinion in 1912 was that, regarding the quarrels 
between Bulgar and Turk, there was a great deal to be said against both 
sides; and that no Balkan people was worth a moment's sentimental 
worry. "Let dogs delight to bark and bite, for 'tis their nature to," 
expressed the common view when one heard that there had been 
murders and village-burnings again in the Balkans. 
Certainly there were enthusiasts who held to the old Gladstonian faith 
that there was some peculiar merit in the Bulgarian people which 
justified all that they did, and which would justify Great Britain in 
going into the most dangerous of wars on their behalf. These 
enthusiasts, as if to make more startlingly clear their    
    
		
	
	
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